The Baltic nation of Estonia is moving closer toward the potential launch of its own crypto token.

In a blog post published today, Kaspar Korjus, managing director of the country’s e-Residency initiative, set out three possible use cases for the token – dubbed “estcoin” – that have been arrived at since the concept was first aired in August. As Korjus noted in his blog post, the concept quickly went viral as speculation swirled that Estonia might become the first country with its own dedicated digital currency.

And while the e-Residency program isn’t yet launching the token, Korjus laid out some of the conceptual groundwork in the new blog post, noting the different ways in which the cryptocurrency might be used – as well as how the e-Residency program could serve as a basis for how initial coin offerings within the Baltic nation could be conducted.

Firstly, Korjus sets out the case for a “community estcoin,” which would be aimed to support the objective of developing Estonia’s aims to build a “digital nation” by incentivising people to “apply for and make greater use of e-Residency.”

This could include rewards schemes that pay out in estcoin, encouraging businesses to adopt the token, and also includes “encouraging investors and entrepreneurs to use e-Residency as their platform for trusted ICO activity,” he said.

A second use case for the token would be to provide a basis for secure, government-issued digital identities.

In this role, estcoins would be used as “blockchain-based tokens used for activities within our digital society, such as digitally signing documents, logging into services or enforcing smart contracts,” Korjus indicates.

While “identity estcoins” may ultimately need to be bought by users of the e-Residency scheme, they would not raise revenue for the nation, “but merely contribute to the maintenance of the network,” the post indicates.

Euro-backed coins?

However, a third – and perhaps more controversial – option could see the token pegged to the price of the euro – an idea that was blasted by European Central Bank president Mario Draghi.

“No member state can introduce its own currency; the currency of the euro zone is the euro,” Draghi said of the concept in September.

Korjus said that, while Estonia would “never provide an alternative currency to the euro, … it’s possible that we could combine some of the decentralised advantages of crypto with the stability and trust of fiat currency and then limit its use within the e-resident community.”

This fiscal use case for the token would require banks to move money in and out of the scheme, according to the post. However, once on the blockchain, “community-based value exchanges could take place globally for free.”

“All that is required is a digital wallet and the commitment of government to buy back every euro estcoin for one euro,” according to Korjus.

Since it was originally announced, the estcoin scheme has been both praised and criticised as “a solution looking for a problem.” While acknowledging the latter view, Korjus said:

“Since the estcoin proposal was made, we’ve been carefully reading and listening to feedback from around the world. As a result, we do now have a better understanding of not just how estcoin could be structured, but also why people would want to hold them.”

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There’s a new party interested in initial coin offerings (ICOs): global governments.

This time, though, they aren’t just out to warn citizens or regulate the new mechanism. Instead, at least one progressive government is considering whether it can take advantage of the technology.

The Baltic nation of Estonia made a splash last month proposing a government-supported token – the “estcoin” – as an extension of its e-Residency program. As detailed in a blog post that quickly vent viral, the proceeds would be used to create a type of public-private sovereign wealth fund that would invest in Estonian digital infrastructure projects and technology startups.

The idea won equal praise and derision, getting lambasted by European Central Bank president Mario Draghi.

“No member state can introduce its own currency; the currency of the euro zone is the euro.“

It’s a notable comment in that it underscores a strange disconnect: are these new cryptocurrency tokens actually currencies?

The token tiff

While governments around the world are still in the process of deciding whether or not cryptocurrencies meet the definition of a currency – and many times that depends on just when and how they’re used – Draghi’s comments indicate some are lumping ICO tokens into the currency bucket already.

But tokens have key differences from cryptocurrencies that might make them look even less like a currency.

In Estonia, for example, the wealth fund seems more about giving Estonia’s 22,000 “e-residents” – foreigners who are allowed access to certain services and benefits normally enjoyed by Estonian citizens – a new way to engage with the country, than giving them a new method for transacting that could rival the the euro.

According to the August 22 blog post, authored by e-Residency scheme managing director Kaspar Korjus:

“A government-supported ICO would give more people a bigger stake in the future of our country and provide not just investment, but also more expertise and ideas to help us grow exponentially.”

In this way, the token – which earned the endorsement of ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin – would function as a vehicle for raising proceeds that’s more nuanced and targeted than traditional means: namely, governments issuing bonds in international capital markets.

But there were a couple paragraphs in the blog post that likely raised red flags with Draghi, and will raise flags with other Eurozone regulators. Those paragraphs have Estonia envisioning a future where the estcoins could potentially be used as a medium of exchange for goods and services both in and outside the country.

The one currency

Either way, it seems Estonia might be putting the cart before the horse.

Because not only did Estonia forfeit its right to issue its own currency and control its monetary policy in 2011 when it joined the Eurozone, but with that it also relinquished its ability to raise money in anything other than the euro.

“If you sign up to the Eurozone, you sign up to the euro. Your financing is in euros,” said Daniel Heller, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and a former executive at the Swiss National Bank and the Bank of International Settlements.

In an email exchange with CoinDesk, sentiments from the ECB spokesman Peter Ehrlich align:

“Within the legal framework of the European Union, in all member states that, like Estonia, have introduced the single currency, only the euro is the legal tender and the monetary policy lies exclusively with the European Central Bank.”

These statements are what make Estonia’s public ideation that much more confounding, especially since the project sounds similar to Italy and Greece’s efforts to create so-called “parallel” fiat currencies that could be used domestically alongside the euro. Both proposals have been met with red lights from European authorities.

“There are no exceptions to this rule,” a European Commission spokesperson, referencing the euro-only mandate, told Reuters in August after it slammed the door on Italy’s parallel currency proposal.

The crypto utopia

While many government regulators have made recommendations, if not formal decrees, for how cryptocurrency should be regulated in certain situations, there isn’t a more homogenous way of categorizing them as you typically see in more traditional markets.

While many have argued this diversity of opinion inserts roadblocks to the global tool’s use, that hasn’t stopped cryptocurrency’s upward trend in price (arguably one of the main mechanisms used to determine cryptocurrency’s success).

Similarly governments have begun forming mixed opinions on ICOs – everything from all out bansin Chinato accommodationin Quebec.But one thing seems certain: some of these tokens will belabeled as securities.

While some worry about the impact of these regulatory declarations, the industry, for the most part, has continued with business as usual.

Business as usual, that is, except with companies and developers trying to position their tokens so as not to be classified as a security by saying instead that they’re utility or app tokens – though those definitions remain a structural and legal gray area, as well.

It’s unclear, at this point in its ideation phase, how the estcoins project plans on defining its token, but it’s currently soliciting feedback from stakeholders and potential participants.

Arnaud Castaignet, head of the e-Residency scheme’s public relations, told CoinDesk that initial responses from Estonia’s startup and blockchain community have been supportive, and that the current goal is to lay out all of the pros and cons before mapping out any formal next steps:

“We are ready to move forward, nevertheless a national conversation is necessary first. If there is support for this proposal, then the next stage before the ICO would be to provide a white paper that outlines the value of estcoins and how the investment will be used to develop our digital nation.”

In his blog post proposing the estcoins idea, Korjus did not discuss how the token might co-exist vis-a-vis Estonia’s obligations to the euro, an omission that caught the attention of several observers. And Castaignet did not respond to follow-up questions about the topic.

A possible out?

While Draghi’s remarks left no room for ambiguity about estcoin’s viability as a state-backed digital currency, the ECB’s Ehrlich didn’t rule out the proposal entirely. Instead, he suggested that, because the project would be undertaken via a public-private partnership, it would be outside of the ECB’s jurisdiction.

“[M]y understanding is that it’s a private idea and no official position. The ECB will not comment on ideas brought forward by the private sector,” he told CoinDesk.

Therefore, with the right combination of messaging and legal sleight of hand, the project might just pass muster with European technocrats.

Heller reckoned that for the project to have a chance, it would need to as a bond-like financial instrument that is neither an official currency nor a traditional bond.

Further, the tokens would need to be tied to a quasi-official entity:

“What would be possible is if it’s issued by some state-owned entity. We have this distinction that, say, debt of the gas company is not public debt because it’s a gas company, even if it’s owned by the government.”

If Estonia is indeed able to thread the needle and launch the token without breaching its Eurozone obligations, the project will possess an aura of legitimacy that means it should have no problem attracting hungry ICO investors, reckonedDavid Gerard, a U.K.-based commentator and author of “Attack of the 50 Foot Blockchain.”

“Something offered by a government is going to attract attention,” he said. “The value proposition for their ICO would just be, ‘We’re a sovereign country with a decent credit rating for our size,’ which is pretty attractive – especially in a bubble.”

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Disclaimer: This article should not be taken as, and is not intended to provide, investment advice. Please conduct your own thorough research before investing in any cryptocurrency.